Left Field
The phrase "out of left field" has come to be used in popular vernacular to describe any idea which seems wildly unrelated to the subject being discussed.
Video abstraction: A systematic review and classification
A paper that can be extremely useful for people working on video accessibility. This paper presents a comprehensive survey of the research in video abstraction. Although the focus is on the importance of abstraction for effective and efficient access of large volumes of video content, video abstraction can also be very useful for disabled users.
Video abstraction: A systematic review and classification
The demand for various multimedia applications is rapidly increasing due to the recent advance in the computing and network infrastructure, together with the widespread use of digital video technology. Among the key elements for the success of these applications is how to effectively and efficiently manage and store a huge amount of audio visual information, while at the same time providing user-friendly access to the stored data. This has fueled a quickly evolving research area known as video abstraction. As the name implies, video abstraction is a mechanism for generating a short summary of a video, which can either be a sequence of stationary images (keyframes) or moving images (video skims). In terms of browsing and navigation, a good video abstract will enable the user to gain maximum information about the target video sequence in a specified time constraint or sufficient information in the minimum time. Over past years, various ideas and techniques have been proposed towards the effective abstraction of video contents. The purpose of this article is to provide a systematic classification of these works. We identify and detail, for each approach, the underlying components and how they are addressed in specific works.
Full Paper: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1198302.1198305
Full Proceedings: ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMCCAP), Vol. 3, No. 1, Article 3, February 2007.
Video abstraction: A systematic review and classification
The demand for various multimedia applications is rapidly increasing due to the recent advance in the computing and network infrastructure, together with the widespread use of digital video technology. Among the key elements for the success of these applications is how to effectively and efficiently manage and store a huge amount of audio visual information, while at the same time providing user-friendly access to the stored data. This has fueled a quickly evolving research area known as video abstraction. As the name implies, video abstraction is a mechanism for generating a short summary of a video, which can either be a sequence of stationary images (keyframes) or moving images (video skims). In terms of browsing and navigation, a good video abstract will enable the user to gain maximum information about the target video sequence in a specified time constraint or sufficient information in the minimum time. Over past years, various ideas and techniques have been proposed towards the effective abstraction of video contents. The purpose of this article is to provide a systematic classification of these works. We identify and detail, for each approach, the underlying components and how they are addressed in specific works.
Full Paper: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1198302.1198305
Full Proceedings: ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMCCAP), Vol. 3, No. 1, Article 3, February 2007.
Labels: abstraction, review, survey, video
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
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